UNIX might be standard but it doesn't make it cross platform. You might not like it but a lot of people develop on windows. Build tools that assume a unix environment is present aren't a solution.
Posix is cross platform. There's a reason it's easy to build stuff on mac os, free bsd and linux.
Just because Windows decided to do everything differently to Unix and you decided to use Windows doesn't mean everything else has to adapt to be "cross platform".
FWIW, GNU Make runs fine in Windows if you're allergic to WSL
> UNIX might be standard but it doesn't make it cross platform. You might not like it but a lot of people develop on windows.
I fail to understand what point you tried to make. There are already plenty of Make implementations for Windows. If you think that installing a third party tool like Task is ok, I don't see how doing the same with a Make implementation would exclude it as a valid alternative.
I don't think using Task is better either. I was just replying to OP saying to just use unix tools. Unix tools aren't cross platform so they aren't a good build tool either.
nmake has been part of MS Visual Studio and former incarnations such as MSVC since basically forever (1988?). And while the shell language recognized by command.com limits nmake's usefulness, tar and curl have been added to standard Win installations only recently.
Just because Windows decided to do everything differently to Unix and you decided to use Windows doesn't mean everything else has to adapt to be "cross platform".
FWIW, GNU Make runs fine in Windows if you're allergic to WSL